| We recently had the chance to sit down with Mike Hacker, the head of the maintenance teams for sister parks, The Resort and Silveridge. When we asked Mike how things were going at the parks, he smiled and said, “The residents are great.” And that’s how Mike judges his work – how residents are feeling. This echoed what he’d told us the last time we sat down with him, as this is how he assesses his team’s work:
“We want to take care of the residents, and we want the property to look so good that everybody wants to stay here.”
That attitude creates a dynamic where the crews and the residents care about one another. Mike told us this, “The residents do such nice things for us. They’ll get everybody lunch, or then I’ll go to the shop, and they’ll have dropped off water or Gatorade, or somebody will drop off cookies or bring doughnuts. Everyone is just so nice.”
Still, as anyone who’s taken care of any property knows, problems inevitably crop up. Despite that, Mike tells us that their number of urgent issues has gone down: “We’re just getting so much better – when we get a problem like a water main leak, we fix it and improve it — and we fixed them all. It’s the same with the cable and internet – Jesse and his team at Freedom are great. I used to hear complaints about cable, but they keep upgrading and now I never hear about problems.”
So, does that mean that there were no maintenance crises over the most recent season? Mike replied, “Nothing crazy. But there was something sad: one of our crew members, Chon, passed away. He was older, but it wasn’t like he had any problems that we knew of. Then one day he told me he had to go to the doctor. That was on a Wednesday, and he passed on Friday. That was the low point of the season. But for the parks themselves, everything was smooth.”
One specific maintenance challenge has always been the softball field at The Resort. So much so that the head of the parks’ management company, George Igualt, went to what he calls “Dirt School,” put on by the company that supplies professional sports teams, to try to improve conditions at the park’s ballfield. That caused us to ask Mike for an update on this past season. “The grass looked really good,” Mike told us, adding, “it looked a lot better this year than it did last year because last year was so hot for so long that we almost didn’t put the grass seed down in time. But since it was cooler this year, we were able to put it in two weeks earlier, so it had plenty of time to grow. There are always some problems, and they have a wish list for during the summer, but it looked good.”
(Speaking of wish lists, the off-season is when the parks’ ownership/management team schedules the biggest maintenance items and undertakes upgrades. We’ll get a report on those plans later this summer, when we sit down for our annual visit with George Igualt.)
While meeting with Mike, we asked about his mother, who became one of the park residents a while back. Mike offered to introduce us and so we gladly the opportunity to meet with her and her dog, CeeCee. |